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Cystic Necrosis of the NET vs. SPEN

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0:01

So another case, case of the pancreatic

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lesion, and as we go through the coronal

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images, we see lots of lesions in both kidneys.

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And most of these lesions are showing

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T2-weighted hyperintensity, but some of

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these lesions are having mixed intensity

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with peripheral hypointensity as well.

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Some of these lesions are big and

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exophytic, and some of these lesions

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are small, and they are showing acute

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angulation formed with the parenchyma.

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Which is called as angular interface sign.

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Whenever you see interface sign or acute

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angulation formed by a lesion with the parenchyma,

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they are most likely going to be benign.

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Let us see them in the axial first and

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make sure that we are not missing anything.

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This is the pancreatic

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lesion we are talking about.

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This is the lesion which is well-circumscribed,

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well-defined with central necrosis with

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peripheral thick rim and then the duct is

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seen along with the periphery of this lesion.

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It is slightly dilated distally because

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of the mass effect caused by this lesion.

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But duct proximal is looking normal

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and those lesions in the kidneys are

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again seen, they are hyperintense.

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Some of these are exophytic and they are showing

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some kind of hypointense tissue at the periphery.

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So let's open fat suppress T2 here and see

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how these lesions in the kidney are behaving

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and most of these lesions now become T2

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weighted hypointense with the fat suppression.

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So that means most of these lesions are basically

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angiomyolipomas and the soft tissue component

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which we have seen in some of the lesions above,

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still present, but the lesion in the

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periphery is showing fat suppression,

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so that is also angiomyolipoma.

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So remember, angiomyolipoma has

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three components: angio, myo, lipoma.

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Angio means it is composed of

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blood vessels, blood component.

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Myo means it has a component of musculature,

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and lipoma means it has the fat.

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So it is possible one of the angiomyolipoma

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may have a dominant component of the

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fat, and one of them might have

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dominant component of the musculature or muscle

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tissue, or spindled cells, or smooth muscles.

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So if we see this kind of appearance,

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it is possibly a mixed kind of angiomyolipoma,

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which has both angio, myo,

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and lipoma content dominant.

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Angio component, will be seen better on the

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post-contrast images, which we see can,

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we can see there are like some vessels

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inside, tortuous vessels inside

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and that area of enhancement.

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But based on the T2-weighted images,

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these kidney lesions are angiomyolipomas.

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Let us come back to the

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main point, the lesion in the pancreas.

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We see a lesion during the arterial

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phase, which is enhancing along with the

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periphery and demonstrates central necrosis.

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And do we have hemorrhagic

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component inside this lesion?

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There is some focus of hyperintensity,

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but most of the lesion is looking hypointense.

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And how it behaves on the venous phase?

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During the venous phase, we still see

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the enhancement along with the periphery,

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which is kind of irregular, and the

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duct is not significantly dilated.

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So, here the differential remains between

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SPN and Necrotic Neuroendocrine Tumor.

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So, this is a male patient and the tumor is situated

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in the mid of the pancreas or in the body,

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and we did not see significant hemorrhagic

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component within the tumor itself, though there

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is necrosis which is better seen on T2-weighted

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images, and the component of necrosis did not

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enhance much and the periphery enhancing, almost

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similar to the pancreatic parenchyma.

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So, the differential still remains SPN

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versus neuroendocrine tumor,

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which has undergone cystic necrosis.

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So, this was actually a case of cystic necrosis

3:59

of neuroendocrine tumor in the pancreas.

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But it looks like SPN. If this patient is

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young, around 20-30 years old, and female,

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I would go with SPN. But given the differential

4:11

of cystic neuroendocrine tumor together,

4:15

and biopsy will be conclusion in this case.

Report

Faculty

Neeraj Lalwani, MD, FSAR, DABR

Professor and Chief of Abdominal Radiology

Montefiore Medical Center, New York

Tags

Pancreas

Neoplastic

MRI

Body

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